The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

With help of reversal, Yankees top A’s

Play at plate gets reversed in 9th inning

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Left fielder Brett Gardner threw out Matt Olson at the plate with the help of a replay reversal to help Aroldis Chapman escape a bases-loaded, no-outs jam in the ninth inning, and the Yankees beat the Oakland Athletics 7-6 Saturday on Neil Walker’s run-scoring single on the 11th to avoid New York’s first three-game losing streak since last August.

Chapman walked three straight batters around a wild pitch starting the ninth, his velocity down 3-4 mph on the cool afternoon from the 100 mph-plus heat that overpowere­d Boston on warm spring nights earlier in the week. After visits to the mound by both pitching coach Larry Rothschild and a trainer to check on a cracked fingernail, Chapman struck out Mark Canha, and pinch-hitter Jonathan Lucroy followed with a 297foot fly to left field.

Gardner’s one-hop throw to the plate was slightly to the first-base side, and Gary Sanchez had to reach for it and try for a sweep tag at the sliding Olson. Plate umpire James Hoye made an emphatic safe call, but the Yankees asked for a video review and replays appeared to show Sanchez’s mitt just glancing Olson’s jersey.

A.J. Cole (1-0), pitching for the first time since his Yankees debut on April 28, walked Oakland’s first two batters in the 10th, then struck out Jed Lowie and Chris Davis before retiring Olson on a foulout. Cole pitched a perfect 11th that included a pair of called strikeouts.

Chris Hatcher (3-1) walked former Marlins teammate Giancarlo Stanton with one out in the 11th, and Gary Sanchez hit into a forceout. Aaron Hicks walked, and Walker flared a single to center as Sanchez scored standing up ahead of Canha’s weak throw.

New York (27-12) stopped a two-game losing streak that followed its 17-1 run. The Yankees began that day tied with AL East rival Boston for the best record in the major leagues.

Sanchez and Hicks hit the Yankees’ first consecutiv­e home runs of the year in the second, but Oakland ended Domingo German’s 15-inning scoreless streak with a five-run third. Khris Davis hit his 10th homer, a threerun drive that bounced off the top of the left-field wall, and Canha had a two-run single with two outs. Lowrie’s sacrifice fly boosted the lead to 6-2 in the fifth

Judge hit a two-run homer off Andrew Triggs in the bottom half, Walker hit a run-scoring single on a 3-2 pitch off Danny Coulombe for his first RBI off a left-hander this year and Miguel Andujar had a tying single against Ryan Dull. Third baseman Matt Chapman prevented a bigger inning when he made a diving backhand stop of Stanton’s smash and from foul territory threw him out at first for the inning’s first out.

Didi Gregorius ended an 0-for-30 slide — on the afternoon of the Didi Gregorius Bat Day promotion — when he followed Judge’s homer with a single.

After pitching six hitless innings against Cleveland last weekend in his first big league start, German retired his first seven batters before Canha’s single. German allowed six runs, six hits and three walks in five innings, but retired his final three batters — starting a streak in which the Yankees set down 12 hitters in order.

Jonathan Holder, Chad Green and Dellin Betances each pitched a perfect inning before Chapman’s wild ride.

David Hess pitched six effective innings in his big league debut, Jonathan Schoop hit two home runs and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Tampa Bay Rays 6-3 Saturday in the first game of a doublehead­er.

Manny Machado also homered for the Orioles, who shook off an early deficit to extend their winning streak to four games — their longest run since last August.

Recalled from Triple-A Norfolk to serve as the 26th man in the single-admission doublehead­er, Hess (10) gave up three runs and six hits, walking none and striking out three.

Pitching on just three days’ rest, the 2014 fifthround draft pick struggled at the outset before closing with five innings of two-hit ball.

Mychal Givens worked 1 2/3 innings for his first save.

Matt Duffy hit a threerun homer for the Rays, who have scored only 10 runs during a five-game losing streak.

Chris Archer (2-3) went seven innings, allowing six runs and seven hits — including a season-high three homers.

Before the game, Orioles manager Buck Showalter expressed hope that the 24-yearold Hess would get off to a solid start in the biggest game of his baseball career.

“If I could wish one thing for him, it’s get through the first inning clean and kind of get his feet on the ground,” Showalter said.

Unfortunat­ely for Hess, the opposite occurred. With one out, C.J. Cron and Joey Wendle hit successive singles and Duffy drove a pitch over the center-field wall.

Hess settled down after that, perhaps earning himself a longer stay with the big league club.

Schoop homered leading off the second, and Chance Sisco hit an RBI double before scoring on the front end of a double steal.

In the fourth, Machado hit his 13th home run and his fourth in three games, tying Boston’s Mookie Betts for the most in the majors. Schoop hit the next pitch for a 5-3 lead.

The game was the makeup of a rainout on April 24.

 ?? JULIE JACOBSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? New York Yankees’ Brett Gardner, left, congratula­tes Neil Walker after Walker drove in the winning run against the Oakland Athletics during the eleventh inning of a baseball game, Saturday in New York. The Yankees won 7-6.
JULIE JACOBSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Yankees’ Brett Gardner, left, congratula­tes Neil Walker after Walker drove in the winning run against the Oakland Athletics during the eleventh inning of a baseball game, Saturday in New York. The Yankees won 7-6.

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